Stand UP for Each Other: Campaign for Respect and Inclusion

Jewish Teens Gain Resources to Mobilize for Respect and Inclusion

Jewish Teens Take the Lead to End Bullying and Support LGBTQ Teens

The Major International Jewish Youth Movements Join Forces

[Washington, DC] Jewish teenagers from the major International Jewish Youth Movements are taking on bullying and standing up for their lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer peers. In addition to publicly committing to end bullying and creating an inclusive environment in their own movements, the Coalition of Jewish Teen Leaders, (the presidents of the International Jewish Youth Movements of BBYO, NCSY, NFTY, USY and Young Judaea) has set a goal of getting 18,000 Jews to sign Keshet’s “Jewish Community Pledge to Save Lives”. This goal has been echoed by the Executive leadership of the movements and their staff.

“It is really exciting to see Jewish teen leadership take a strong stand against homophobia and to promote a vision of the Jewish community that fully embraces all forms of diversity. When Keshet began the Jewish Community Pledge campaign, we hoped that it would lead to exactly this type of action. As important as it is for Jewish adults to take a stand against bullying and harassment, the most important voice for Jewish youth to hear is that of other youth. I know that there are LGBTQ teens in each of these youth groups as well as unaffiliated youth who will see this letter and feel affirmed by their peers,” said Andrea Jacobs, Director of Education, Keshet.

Connected by their shared desire and passion for tikkun olam, the responsibility to repair the world, the CJTL has called on their membership to create a more inclusive and open Jewish community for today and tomorrow.

“BBYO, NCSY, NFTY, USY and Young Judaea may be different in many ways, but our mission for the Jewish people is the same. We share a desire to impact lives, and bring Jewish teens together. The CJTL's combined effort to stand for respect and inclusion is a significant one. Rarely do we join forces for a common cause, but in this case, Jewish teens have done just that. We are showing that working together, we are stronger than apart,” said Jeremy Sherman, BBYO’s International Co-President.

The CJTL asks all Jewish teens, as well as all those who work with Jewish teens and the parents and families of Jewish teens, to take a stand against intolerance… As Judaism tells them, they are created b’tzelem Elohim, in the image of God, and therefore, it is their role and responsibility as individuals, and also as a community, to always respect one another

“We call being inclusive and working against bullying and intolerance, ‘Living NFTY’; by working together with the teens in the CJTL we’ve been able to tell the larger community that saying no to bullies and being inclusive is living Jewishly,” said Daniel Landesberg, NFTY’s President.

The initiative began this fall when a horrific spate of teen suicide due to homophobic bullying gained national attention. While each youth organization initially responded independently, it was a natural issue for collaboration for the CJTL.

“In taking a strong stand against homophobic bullying and intolerance, these teens send an extraordinarily powerful message that they uphold LGBTQ inclusion and equality as fundamental tenets of our community,” says Lynn Schusterman, chair of the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation. “These teens believe deeply in building a more welcoming community—one that treats their LGBTQ peers with dignity and respect, celebrates diversity and promotes inclusiveness in Jewish life. Together, by taking the Jewish community pledge not to stand idly by, they represent a united Jewish contingent on behalf of this vision.”

In addition to the collective efforts of the CJTL, the movements are doing major work within their organization to support LGBTQ teens and bring awareness to this issue.

The CJTL had previously been convened to support disaster relief in Haiti, and also Iran’s Nuclear Disarmament, but never before had an issue been so close and personally tied to their experience as teens.

“It has been an honor working with the leaders of the other Jewish youth organizations, and all our joint efforts serve as a symbol of what can be accomplished by working towards a common purpose. When people are willing to reach over borders in order to effect significant political, cultural, and global change, real progress can be achieved. I hope that my efforts and the efforts of the entire Coalition of Jewish Teen Leaders are just the beginning of this process,” said Josh Block, USY’s International President.

We have used the term LGBTQ with guidance from our partner, Keshet. LGBTQ is an acronym for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer. In the history of their usage these terms have been applied in a variety of ways, but today these are terms that are embraced and used in a positive context. While the term “queer” has a history of being used pejoratively, the term has been reclaimed by many in the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender community, as early as the late 1980s with the establishment of the GLBT activist group "Queer Nation." Many younger GLBT people, in particular, claim the word as an identity that resonates most fully with their sense of who they are in terms of gender, sexuality and their political and cultural identities. Certainly, these are words that make some people comfortable and others uncomfortable but such is the dynamic of a complex, vibrant community! The most important thing to remember when identifying anyone, is to do so with respect.

The BBYO International Conventiont has grown to be a setting for individuals across the Jewish community to learn, lead and work together toward ensuring a strong Jewish future, spearheaded by the next generation.

I am part of a truly amazing and enriching experience at the Marcus Jewish Community Center of Atlanta. I serve on the Teen JAM leadership committee, a task force for J-Serve, the International Day of Jewish Community Service for teens, which is Sunday, April 19, from 1 to 6:30 p.m.